Shallow Geologic Storage of Carbon to Remove Atmospheric CO 2 and Reduce Flood Risk

Geologic carbon storage currently implies that CO is injected into reservoirs more than 1 km deep, but this concept of geologic storage can be expanded to include the injection of solid, carbon-bearing particles into geologic formations that are one to two orders of magnitude shallower than conventi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2023-06, Vol.57 (23), p.8536-8547
Hauptverfasser: Murdoch, Lawrence C, Germanovich, Leonid N, Slack, William W, Carbajales-Dale, Michael, Knight, Douglas, Moak, Robert, Laffaille, Clemence, DeWolf, Scott, Roudini, Soheil
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Geologic carbon storage currently implies that CO is injected into reservoirs more than 1 km deep, but this concept of geologic storage can be expanded to include the injection of solid, carbon-bearing particles into geologic formations that are one to two orders of magnitude shallower than conventional storage reservoirs. Wood is half carbon, available in large quantities at a modest cost, and can be milled into particles and injected as a slurry. We demonstrate the feasibility of shallow geologic storage of carbon by a field experiment, and the injection process also raises the ground surface. The resulting CO storage and ground uplift rates upscale to a technique that could contribute to the mitigation of climate change by storing carbon as well as helping to adapt to flooding risks by elevating the ground surface above flood levels. A life-cycle assessment indicates that CO emissions caused by shallow geologic storage of carbon are a small fraction of the injected carbon.
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.3c00600